Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 55— - NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - FEDERAL PERMITTING IMPROVEMENT › § 4370m–1
Creates a Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council and puts a President‑appointed Executive Director in charge as the Council’s chair. Heads of several agencies (including Agriculture, Army, Commerce, Interior, Energy, Transportation, Defense, EPA, FERC, NRC, Homeland Security, HUD, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, plus any other agency the Executive Director invites) must each name a senior official (deputy secretary level or above) to serve on the Council and must tell the Executive Director within 30 days if they change that person. The Chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget are also members. Each agency must name one or more agency CERPOs (Council on Environmental Review and Permitting Officers) who report to that agency’s Council member. The Executive Director must, in consultation with the Council, do several things on set schedules. Within 180 days after December 4, 2015, create an inventory of covered projects waiting for federal environmental reviews or permits, sort them by sector and type, and identify the common kinds of reviews for each group. The Executive Director must add projects when notices are received, name a facilitating agency for each project category, and publish that list on the Dashboard. Within 1 year after December 4, 2015, develop recommended performance schedules with intermediate and final dates for the common reviews and permits. The schedules should use efficient processes and, when possible, aim for no more than 2 years; if a schedule is longer than 2 years it must explain why. Final dates may not exceed the historical average time to finish a review (measured from the required Dashboard entry or, for earlier projects, from filing a completed application), and any agency decision must be issued no later than 180 days after the agency has all information needed. The schedules must be reviewed at least every 2 years. The Executive Director can hire staff and suggest guidance to OMB or CEQ. The Council must recommend designations, update schedules, give annual best‑practice recommendations (for example, early stakeholder and tribal engagement, faster decisions, better coordination and transparency, fewer paperwork burdens, GIS tools, and training), meet at least yearly with State/tribal/local groups, and the agency CERPOs must advise, support, analyze, and train agency staff on reviews and authorizations.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 4370m–1
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73